Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 35Oxford University Press, 1969 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 3
Seite 41
... often incredible , and with all his preaching and didacticism often like some character out of Irish comedy . Yet one must remember 1 Byron's testimony and Byron was not easily taken in MARIA EDGEWORTH : A BICENTENARY LECTURE 41.
... often incredible , and with all his preaching and didacticism often like some character out of Irish comedy . Yet one must remember 1 Byron's testimony and Byron was not easily taken in MARIA EDGEWORTH : A BICENTENARY LECTURE 41.
Seite 90
... comedy and approaches most nearly to the perfection at which , as Flaubert did , she always aimed . Ske kept within her range of experience , or of the experience which she could best translate into art . But rereading her novels after ...
... comedy and approaches most nearly to the perfection at which , as Flaubert did , she always aimed . Ske kept within her range of experience , or of the experience which she could best translate into art . But rereading her novels after ...
Seite 91
... comedy ; Mrs. Norris could not be too grasping and disagreeable , or Miss Bates too garrulous and fatuous , for me . I longed for their reappearances . Mrs. Charles Musgrove , in Persuasion , was another of my favourites , and her ...
... comedy ; Mrs. Norris could not be too grasping and disagreeable , or Miss Bates too garrulous and fatuous , for me . I longed for their reappearances . Mrs. Charles Musgrove , in Persuasion , was another of my favourites , and her ...
Inhalt
Katja Reissner Lecture 1967 | 1 |
Tredegar Memorial Lecture 1966 | 18 |
A BICENTENARY | 40 |
Urheberrecht | |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abyss art writing artist asked Auden Berenson Brontë Bruni Byron called Castle Rackrent Charlotte Brontë classical ideal Coleridge Coleridge's Coluccio course criticism death doubt Edgeworth Edgeworthstown Emily Brontë Emma England English essay father feel Florence Florentines G. H. Lewes George George IV Giorgione grammar Greek Gulliver's Travels Herculaneum historian human humour imagination interest Ireland Irish Jane Austen John King lady language later LECTURE This lecture literary lived look Lord MacNeice Maria Maria Edgeworth Marianne meaning mind Miss Austen Mme de Staël modern moral nature never Northanger Abbey novelist novels painting Pater perhaps poem poetic poetry poets political Pride and Prejudice Prince of Wales Regent Roman Royal Associates Royal Society scholars Scott seems sense Sense and Sensibility Society of Literature stories Swift things thirties thought tradition verse William word Wordsworth written wrote